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With the aid of a
Dutch woman, Cilli Dzialowski of Holland sent this farewell
letter to her four children, who resided in England during the
war. Her son Hy survived in a hideout in Holland. The letter
was transmitted to Yad Vashem by one of Cilli’s daughters, Mrs.
Jakobovitz, who now lives in Canada. |
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This
letter was written on 16-17 March, 1943 near Lvov, Poland in a
cinema in which about 600 Jews were imprisoned prior to their
murder. One of the policemen guarding the Jews conveyed this
letter from a woman to her husband Abraham. |
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In 1980
a farewell note written in Greek was found at the site of
crematorium no. 3 in Birkenau (Auschwitz). Yad Vashem received
a copy of it from the Auschwitz Museum. The note, which seems
to be incomplete, was probably written by one of the members of
the Jewish Sonderkommando who worked there. |
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This
letter was written by a Jewish carpenter, Srul Shaya Kalezyk,
about 10 months after the Warsaw Ghetto uprising. He wrote in
Polish and Yiddish, on the work permit he had used in the ghetto
prior to its destruction. Lazer Levine found the permit in 1965
amongst the ruins of the ghetto. |
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During
the months of August and September 1942, thousands of Jews were
herded into the synagogue in the town of Kowel, Poland where
they were imprisoned until their execution. In their fear and
desperation, many of them wrote on the walls of the synagogue
using whatever they could – unsharpened pencils, pens and even
their own fingernails. Last testaments, letters and
declarations were written in Hebrew, Yiddish and Polish. Below
are some of the inscriptions that were found.
18,000 Jews were murdered in Kowel. |
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Ellie
Kulka, wife of prisoner no. 73043 wrote this letter to her
husband on June 30th, 1944 whilst waiting to be taken
to the gas chamber. |
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On
December 11, 1941 Anna Lebel of Belgrade wrote a letter to her
husband, who was being held prisoner by the Germans in Berlin.
It was the last night Anna and her daughter Jenny spent in their
home. A few hours before they were to be taken to the Sajmiste
concentration camp near Belgrade, Jenny managed to escape. Anna
and all the Jewish women and children interned in the camp were
later herded onto gas vans, where they were murdered while
driving through the streets of Belgrade.
Jenny survived and was reunited with her father and brother
after the war. |
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Helena
Mandelbaum was born in Cracow in 1925 and held a Costa Rican
passport. She was in a protected camp when the Nazis entered
and sent her to Drancy in the summer of 1944. From there she
was deported to Auschwitz, where she perished. Helena was an
only child. The letter was written in Polish. |
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Siauliai was a large city in Western
Lithuania. On the eve of World War II, there were approximately
5360 Jews living there. During the four days between the German
invasion of Siauliai and its capitulation on June 26, 1941 1000
Jews succeeded in fleeing eastwards. A further 1000 Jews were
murdered by the Germans and Lithuanians in the first two weeks
of the occupation. At the end of July 1941, a ghetto was
established in Siauliai, its Judenrat headed by Mendel Leibowitz.
The SS took over the running of the ghetto in September 1943,
and it was transformed into a concentration camp. On November
5, an Aktion (round-up) was carried out, and 574 children
and hundreds of the elderly and crippled were sent to their
deaths. The last Jews in the ghetto were deported to the
Stutthof camp in Germany in July 1944. Most of them perished.
These two testaments were found on the site of the ghetto. They
were written on the eve of the ghetto’s final liquidation. |